EXECUTIVE SUMMARY JOINT COMMITTEE REPORT ON RISKS AND VULNERABILITIES IN THE EU FINANCIAL SYSTEM SEPTEMBER September 2017 JC

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "EXECUTIVE SUMMARY JOINT COMMITTEE REPORT ON RISKS AND VULNERABILITIES IN THE EU FINANCIAL SYSTEM SEPTEMBER September 2017 JC"

Transcription

1 21 September 2017 JC JOINT COMMITTEE REPORT ON RISKS AND VULNERABILITIES IN THE EU FINANCIAL SYSTEM SEPTEMBER 2017 Executive summary Introduction Risks related to the UK s withdrawal from the EU Persistent valuation risk in the context of an uncertain outlook for yields Low profitability of financial institutions Rapid developments in FinTech Policy actions EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Despite encouraging signs of economic recovery and benign levels of traditional financial market risk proxies, such as volatilities, ongoing political and economic uncertainties in Europe and beyond pose risks to the EU financial sector. Uncertainties around the terms of the UK s withdrawal from the EU have the potential to expose the EU27 and the UK to economic instability and to weaken market confidence, in particular if negotiations end in a disorderly fashion. Such a situation could risk disruptions in the legal framework for financial services and the continuity of financial contracts between parties in the EU27 and the UK. As passport arrangements enabling EU- and UK-domiciled financial entities to operate in each other s jurisdictions will expire, business continuity planning is key. Joint EU27 efforts to ensure a consistent and rigorous approach to granting authorisations to companies seeking to relocate from the UK are important to protect the integrity of the EU Single Market. While the low-interest-rate environment persists, and the search for yield continues, with EU equity and real estate prices continuing to display high levels, not necessarily supported by economic fundamentals, indications of a reversal in interest rates and risk premia have emerged, as some EU sovereign and low-risk corporate yields started to increase. Abrupt increases in yields could affect the profitability of financial institutions, generate substantive portfolio reallocation and spill over into wider asset markets, potentially leading to mark-to-market losses in investment positions and reducing the net wealth of households. Consequences could also include substantive volatility bouts in asset prices and effects on market liquidity. Regarding the insurance sector in the context of Solvency 2, in many cases the effects resulting from typically negative impacts on assets will be overcompensated for by positive impacts on liabilities. Persistent low profitability of banks and insurers remains a major challenge, although some recent improvements have been observed. Returns of EU banks remain, on average, below estimates for the cost of equity, while recent strong increases in trading income may not prove sustainable. Still high levels of nonperforming loans (NPLs) and the need to adapt business models, including the need for substantial investment Page 1

2 in technological infrastructures, aggravate profitability challenges. Simultaneously, overcapacities persist in many banking markets. Attaining adequate profitability is important to attract investors to instruments eligible for loss-absorbing capacity that many banks still need to build up. The combination of low yields, low economic growth and low asset quality in some countries continues to affect EU insurers, as both life and nonlife insurers are largely exposed to interest-rate-sensitive assets, and business models may encompass interest-rate-sensitive product lines. The rapid growth of FinTech increasingly affects the financial sector. It drives business model changes at financial institutions, attracts new market entrants and creates opportunities to increase cost efficiency, improve service quality and broaden access to financial services. The European supervisory authorities (ESAs) are assessing the impact of FinTech on financial institutions business models and their strategic response as well as on supervision and regulation. They have identified data privacy issues, potential client discrimination, vulnerability to cyber-crime and associated legal issues as key risks to consumers and financial institutions, and are providing recommendations and advice on issues such as outsourcing to cloud service providers and roboadvice. Regulatory and supervisory monitoring efforts also cover the use of consumer data and of big data analytics by financial institutions. 1 INTRODUCTION The March 2017 Joint Committee Report on Risks and Vulnerabilities considered the following to be key risks to the EU financial system: (i) the persistent low profitability of financial institutions, (ii) risks around the adequate valuation of asset prices and price volatilities, (iii) increasing interconnectedness via direct and indirect exposure and (iv) information-technology-related risks in a fast-changing technological environment. This autumn 2017 report is in many respects a continuation of those themes, with a focus on continued challenges stemming from an environment of political uncertainty and fragmentation, not least in the light of the UK s withdrawal from the EU, persistent valuation risk also related to an uncertain outlook for yields, and the low profitability of financial institutions. It also highlights challenges resulting from rapid developments in the area of FinTech 1, and presents regulatory and supervisory initiatives to monitor and mitigate the risks identified. This report acknowledges the risks to which the financial system continues to be exposed in a climate of political and economic uncertainties in Europe and beyond. Tendencies towards protectionism, geopolitical tensions and evidence of a less stable US policy agenda add to risks globally. Uncertainties about emerging market economies are lingering, mostly in the light of accumulated external imbalances. In the EU, the macroeconomic environment remains fragile, although the economic recovery is expected to continue in 2017, driven by domestic consumption and exports. Slow implementation of structural reforms has the potential to affect the expected recovery in economic growth. In this environment, highly indebted public and private sectors in the EU are very susceptible to an increase in risk premia. The process of the UK s withdrawal from the EU and the potential for easing fiscal and tightening monetary policy stances, moreover, contribute to a climate of uncertainty. 1 The FSB defines FinTech as technologically enabled financial innovation that could result in new business models, applications, processes or products with an associated material effect on financial markets and institutions and the provision of financial services (link). Page 2

3 Despite the remaining macroeconomic risks and political uncertainties in the EU and worldwide, traditional proxies for financial market risks and volatility, such as the VSTOXX index, are at low levels and do not display perceptible positive correlations with such risks, raising some concerns around a potential disconnect of financial markets from political risk measures. Nevertheless, responses from market analysts to the June 2017 EBA Risk Assessment Questionnaire (RAQ) indicate that geopolitical risks are among the most significant drivers of a more pessimistic component of market sentiment. Figure 1: Political uncertainty and market risk proxies Jun-15 Oct-15 Feb-16 Jun-16 Oct-16 Feb-17 Jun-17 EU US Global VSTOXX (rhs) Note: Economic Policy Uncertainty Index (EPU), developed by Baker et al., based on frequency of articles in EU newspapers that contain the following triple: economic or economy, uncertain or uncertainty and one or more policyrelevant terms; global aggregation based on PPP-adjusted GDP weights; Implied volatility of EuroStoxx 50 (VSTOXX), monthly average. Sources: Baker, Bloom, and Davis 2015; Bloomberg, ESMA RISKS RELATED TO THE UK S WITHDRAWAL FROM THE EU The decision of the UK to withdraw from the EU ( Brexit ) and the subsequent negotiation process are important factors of economic policy uncertainty, with the potential to expose the EU27 and the UK to financial instability. Concerning the longer-term impact, both the ECB and the Bank of England warned in their recent Financial Stability Reviews that a fragmented landscape and the resultant loss of synergies from economies of scale and scope could increase the cost of capital for households and non-financial corporations. The UK s decision includes a policy intention to leave the EU Single Market. 2 Upon withdrawal from the Single Market, UK entities would lose their right to conduct business across the EU27 by way of freedom of establishment and freedom to provide services. Consequently, UK-based market participants may seek to relocate or establish new business in the EU27 in order to maintain access to the Single Market. Likewise, this could affect EU financial market participants presently located in the UK. Significant risks may arise should ongoing negotiations between the EU27 and the UK on the withdrawal terms remain inconclusive or end in a disorderly fashion, if firms do not prepare adequately. Such a situation would risk an abrupt impact on the legal framework for financial flows and services between the EU27 and the UK, with potential implications for market participants and consumers. Associated questions relate to market access in general, to the continuity of financial contracts between parties from the EU27 and the UK and to the structure of production and marketing chains. In this context, long-term contracts, such as insurance 2 See: HM Government, The United Kingdom s exit from, and new partnership with, the European Union, February 2017 (link). Page 3

4 contracts traditionally entailing long-term obligations, would be particularly affected. Hence, portfolio transfers may increase. Corporates and households in the EU27 could face restrictions accessing wholesale and retail financial services provided in the UK. Risks could also arise where consumers are not aware that their financial service provider is based in the UK and/or that their legal protection and rights may have changed. This could include redress, potentially reduced access to some banking or investment products, or scope for higher costs when accessing certain financial products. The risk of a cliff-edge at the end of the negotiation period is particularly relevant where market participants are not taking contingency measures, which imply additional resource costs, to address the consequences of a possible loss of market access, and adequate transitional provisions are not in place. The prominent role of the UK in payment systems, the trading and settlement of derivatives, clearing activities, custodian activities and the reporting of trade repositories in the Single Market implies substantial uncertainty, which has the potential to weaken market confidence. Even though financial services are highly mobile and can be relocated from the UK to the EU27, the relocation of some financial activities, not least of those with high market shares in the UK, could take time. Common EU efforts to ensure a consistent EU supervisory approach around potential relocations are necessary to mitigate the risk of distortions and protect the integrity of the Single Market. Transparency in expected negotiation outcomes could help to mitigate possible reductions in the potential for economies of scale through forward-looking management by market participants. Market participants should ensure that they meet their obligation to prepare contingency plans in a timely manner for service areas predominantly operated from the UK. Such efforts would include their preparations to ensure the continuity of contracts, in a worst-case scenario among others, including efforts to repaper contracts and agreements when needed. National and EU supervisory authorities should be in the position to provide constructive and timely information and guidance for this process. EU27 competent authorities need to be prepared to handle adequately, coherently and rigorously the requests for authorisations from market participants relocating from the UK, and should rigorously assess such applications with a view to subsequently carrying out effective supervision. To this end, the EBA, EIOPA and ESMA have issued, or are in the process of issuing, Opinions 3 proposing to national supervisors several principles concerning the authorisation, supervision and enforcement issues related to financial service providers seeking to relocate to the EU27. These principles also exclude automatic future recognition of existing authorisations by UK regulators and provide further details of governance issues. In a relocation process, market participants may make use of outsourcing or delegation arrangements. For example, UK financial entities may set up EU subsidiaries or third country branches, which subsequently request services from their parent companies. Such outsourcing can pose challenges to effective supervision and compliance with EU requirements, including data protection risks, which apply to supervisors as well as the entities they supervise. Risks may be heightened where outsourcing affects functions or activities that are critical to the functioning of market participants. Such outsourcing should be possible only under strict conditions, following the relevant determinations in the ESAs Opinions mentioned earlier. In particular, market participants establishing new entities in the EU27 need to remain fully responsible for outsourced tasks or functions, and the ability to supervise outsourcing arrangements effectively needs to be ensured. 3 ESMA (2017), Opinion on general principles to support supervisory convergence in the context of the United Kingdom withdrawing from the European Union; EIOPA (2017), Opinion on supervisory convergence in light of the United Kingdom withdrawing from the European Union. Page 4

5 The UK s withdrawal from the EU may also raise possible level-playing-field issues, in particular in relation to investment firms. Licensed investment firms should be subject to appropriate conduct of business and prudential standards. It is important that these firms do not experience incentives through lower regulatory or supervisory standards to establish in specific locations within the EU27. In an Opinion related to investment firms, issued together with two similar Opinions covering investment funds and secondary markets, 4 ESMA provided details in order to safeguard supervisory convergence and to provide clarity to securities market supervisors and market participants. The EBA published an Opinion 5 concerning prudential requirements applicable to investment firms, and intends to propose an updated prudential framework to apply to those firms, with a view to ensuring more proportionate and risk-sensitive prudential treatment. The sectoral impacts of the UK s withdrawal are expected to vary with the exposures of the respective EU27 industries to the UK. Concerning securities markets, the structural impact of the UK s withdrawal appears limited to date, with potential adjustments expected to materialise at a later stage, as market participants reactions and any resulting changes in legal forms require time for decisions and implementation. Currently, 15% of the fund share classes managed by UK registered fund managers are marketed in other EU countries, comprising some 13% of the UK fund sector s assets under management (AuM), with no significant reduction observable yet since the UK referendum. Institutional investors, however, may use UK or extra EU intermediaries to invest in UK funds that are not directly marketed in the EU27, increasing potential EU27 exposures further. In terms of registrations, clear-cut trends are not yet observable, either for the fund industry or for financial market infrastructures or individual financial instruments. Total credit risk exposure of banks domiciled in EU27 Member States to the UK is considerable at ca. EUR 1.19 trillion in Q Thus, ca. 5.6% of total EU banks credit risk exposure is towards UK assets and counterparties. However, heterogeneity across Member States is strong. Insurers based in the European Economic Area (EEA), excluding the UK, allocated approximately EUR 165 billion into UK assets at the end of Q Thus, only 3.2% of total EU insurers investment portfolios have been allocated in different asset categories such as UK government bonds, corporate bonds, equity, cash and deposits, mortgages, and loans. A certain degree of heterogeneity among the countries implies that some national insurance industries are marginally more exposed, but exposure in general remains limited. Similarly, there has been so far only some incremental relocation of (re)insurance business from UK to the EU. It is expected that more concrete measures will need to take effect from autumn 2017 onwards, considering that the lead-time for new authorisations or transfer of portfolios is 1 to 1.5 years. Additional work will be needed in order to further assess the impact of the UK s withdrawal on financial institutions risk profile, e.g. concerning potential changes in sovereign risk-weights and the impact of a potential deterioration in macroeconomic conditions. 3 PERSISTENT VALUATION RISK IN THE CONTEXT OF AN UNCERTAIN OUTLOOK FOR YIELDS In the context of the persisting low-interest-rate environment, expectations for a reversal in interest rates have started to emerge. Abruptly increasing yields could lead to losses for investment positions in many asset 4 ESMA (2017), Press release: ESMA issues sector-specific principles on relocations from the UK to the EU27. 5 EBA (2016), Opinion of the European Banking Authority on the First Part of the Call for Advice on Investment Firms, EBA-Op Source: EBA supervisory reporting. Sample of 149 banks domiciled in the EU27 and Norway, excluding Poland and Romania. 7 Unit-/index-linked products and collective investments are excluded. Page 5

6 classes, and could generate substantive volatility bouts in asset prices, while elevated asset price levels reflect the presence of valuation risk. Since late 2016, EU sovereign and low-risk corporate yields started to increase, 8 matching gradual improvements in the macroeconomic context. Inflation, both materialised and expected, has increased since mid-2016, although flattening out to some degree lately. 9 Related expectations for a gradual phasing out of unconventional expansionary monetary policies, including the ECB s asset purchase programme, may result in a more general repricing of risk premia, in particular in EU economies exposed to financial fragility. The currently elevated sensitivity of euro area (EA) sovereign debt markets to US conditions and elevated selling pressures for EA debt, and in particular sovereign debt, 10 could act as alternative potential triggers of a repricing of risk premia. Such potential may become even more pronounced, 11 if current market expectations for US monetary policies prove to be misaligned. A tightening trend of US monetary policy would reinforce the international strength of the US dollar, pushing up global yields. Emerging economies could experience further capital outflows and increasing difficulties in paying off their debts. Ultimately, all these factors may contribute to rising global credit spreads. Figure 2: Yield curves M 3M 6M 1Y 2Y 5Y 10Y 15Y 20Y 30Y DE US UK Note: EUR EONIA, GBP SONIA and USD OIS swap curves, in %. Lighter hues indicate more distant dates, with each step marking one month back in time. The most recent curve is from 24 July Sources: Thomson Reuters Eikon, Thomson Reuters Datastream, ESMA. Figure 3: Sovereign bond yield indices Jan-14 Aug-14 Mar-15 Oct-15 May-16 Dec-16 Jul-17 DE BG CZ DK EA ES FI FR IE IT NL AT PL PT SE UK GR (rhs) Note: Yields on 10-year sovereign bonds, selected EU members, in %. 5Y- MA=five-year moving average of EA 10-year bond indices. Sources: Thomson Reuters Datastream, ESMA Term structures in private debt markets have not yet experienced major changes: the EONIA swap curves stood roughly unchanged and the SONIA swap curve flattened only slightly, while the US dollar overnight index swap (OIS) curve flattened substantially. A roughly flat pound sterling and a depreciated US dollar did not interfere strongly with yield levels in the first half of Hence, recent yield changes at the longer end of the EU private sector debt spectrum derive rather from inflation and credit risk than from term structure or 8 A number of EU sovereign bond 10-year yields rose by up to 35bps since the start of the year, while the yields of AA- and A-rated corporate EU bonds remained roughly stable. For euro area (EA) corporate bonds, negative excess risk premia indicate potential overvaluation (ECB (2017), Financial Stability Review, May 2017). Repo rates in major EA markets started to edge up again, with the spread between general and special collateral widening, while securities lending rates, e.g. on German sovereign bonds, increased on the margin. 9 EU Commission (2017), European Economic Forecast, Spring Expected inflation for the EU and the EA increased strongly between 2016 and 2017, but has receded marginally since February ECB (2017), Financial Stability Review, May 2017, Chart 2.5, p International differences in spreads between the yields of 3M interbank funds and overnight index swaps (OIS) reflect the potential for international spillovers. Data supporting this paragraph is reported in ESMA (2017), Report on Trends, Risks and Vulnerabilities, no Page 6

7 foreign currency premia. Indeed, non-financial corporate and covered bond EU credit risk spreads suggested that risk premia moved up at the lower end of the risk spectrum, while yield compression continued in more risky market segments. Search for yield continued in the EU investment fund (IF) sector too, with cash positions of bond funds decreasing and the average credit quality of EU IF debt portfolio components further receding. Since mid-2016, major EU equity markets have gained well over 20% in value, with the EU-wide P/E ratio surpassing its eight-year average in March Insurance and other financial service sectors contributed to this trend by coming from previously lower levels and outperforming banking. Lower implied volatilities, i.e. below pre-crisis levels, do not portend massive price corrections ahead, but rather point to momentum in increasing valuations. Equity price risks nevertheless remain prominent, to the extent that moderately positive economic growth and macroeconomic fundamentals do not confirm financial market performance. However, decoupling tendencies observed for EU bond yields and equity market performances, in particular for corporate bonds, 12 hint at the return to complementary bond and equity markets, allowing improved diversification opportunities and potentially lowering price contagion risk. Improved diversification opportunities are likely to reduce total risk exposure in the financial sector, while less potential for contagion is expected to mitigate negative balance sheet and wealth effects generated by potential changes in yield levels. Eased credit standards for EU households and increased investments of institutional investors in commercial real estate added to strongly growing prices in residential and commercial real estate, e.g. in some EU capitals. 13 The current potential for changes in risk premia could, upon materialisation, imply substantial risk linked to an increase in interest rates, as rising rates might not be sustainable for real estate debtors. This might generate subsequent valuation effects in real estate loan portfolios, in particular when meeting local indebtedness issues of households and the private sector. The coexistence of a continued search for yield and the gradual trend of reversals in yields and risk premia levels generates a particular risk mixture including on the one hand valuation and ancillary risks around leverage, and on the other hand funding and liquidity risk. Enhanced valuations inflate balance sheets and concentrate, in the context of continued bank deleveraging, in particular in portfolios of equities and securities intermediated through either financial markets or non-bank institutions, further increasing price sensitivity and redirecting investment risks to the non-financial sector. Hence, they imply valuation risks for household net wealth, balance sheets and investment portfolios in case of future price corrections, generating funding and liquidity risks for financial institutions and downside risks for the macroeconomic cycle. Coupled with concerns about debt sustainability of public and private sectors, also including households, such effects would be of particular relevance. The divergence between gradually less accommodative monetary policies and current market sentiments may pave the way for potentially abrupt movements in global financial markets going ahead. 14 Hence, the current low level of expected market volatility needs to be evaluated in the context of historically low interest rates and yields. 12 The median correlation of national corporate bond indices yields to redemption to respective returns of national stock indices rose in 2017 from -0.1 to a peak of 0.5 in late May before reverting. Such levels, which markedly exceed the recent two-year average of -0.04, were observed for the last time in 2011, and before that only during the financial crisis and several times in the period between 2002 and ESRB warning on medium-term vulnerabilities in the EU residential real estate sector (2016). ECB (2017), Financial Stability Review, May The IMF GFSR of October 2016 holds a similar discussion in its chapter 1 (link). Page 7

8 Risks related to an abrupt reversal of yields and risk premia An abrupt increase in yields would result in capital losses for investment positions in low-yield and longduration portfolios. 15 Reasons include the extraordinarily high sensitivity of bond prices to yields in an environment of low interest rates. Hence, EU pension funds and investment funds, which hold on average around 50% and more than 30%, respectively, of their total portfolios invested in bonds, but also EU banks, which invest 15% of their assets in fixed-income markets, would be vulnerable to significant mark-to-market losses on their asset side. Entities concentrated on debt of risk-sensitive sovereigns would be hit particularly hard, entailing the potential for a re-emergence of the sovereign bank nexus. Immediate reactions in funding costs could temporarily imply an additional drag on the profitability of financial institutions. EA financial entities floating-rate instruments were still 33% of their total long-term debt in early Even for cases in which higher yields would affect the profitability of financial institutions positively in the first round, as opposed to the negative consequences of long periods of low interest rates, 16 their final impact may be more nuanced. Reasons therefore include (i) potential losses stemming from trading positions; (ii) differences in the speed of adjustments of the assets and liabilities of financial institutions; and (iii) persistent weaknesses in the balance sheet of these institutions. Mark-to-market losses would be particularly acute for unhedged holders of long-term debt securities issued in the recent years of low interest rates. 17 Finally, abrupt reversals in yields and/or risk premia could generate volatility bouts in asset prices. Portfolio reallocations, in the form of funding withdrawals and subsequent reinvestments, could temporarily feed liquidity and contagion risks, potentially reinforcing initial triggers for yield increases. Geographically asymmetric reversals, e.g. due to the materialisation of political risks or asynchronous economic policies, would tend to widen interest rate gaps and increase exchange rate volatility, and could also contribute to volatile international capital flows. Persistent increases in asset prices moreover contribute to the rise of nominal balance sheets. If valuation methods continue to be opaque and asset quality concerns remain present, valuation risk can reduce the efficiency of the financial sector and impinge on the transformation of savings into real investments. Because financial intermediaries increase their equity to appropriately provision against risk, and households tend not to react to valuation gains perceived as temporary, aggregate demand does not react and funds are diverted into purely financial investments. These, however, do not necessarily generate any additional positive impact on real investment, in particular if underlying drivers are considered temporary. The related build-up of a potential for future price corrections adds to risks around future volatility in asset prices, also reinforcing the risks around reversals in yield levels and risk premia. These increase uncertainties regarding the stability of financial intermediaries in general as well as potential negative feedbacks to aggregate demand, in particular investment demand, and therefore economic growth. In the insurance sector, liabilities typically have a longer duration than the assets. Unlike in other financial sectors, the overall impact may therefore be positive, as liabilities will be valued lower because higher (risk-free) rates are used for 15 The ECB Financial Stability Review, May 2017, reports a 15-20% loss in such portfolios due to 2ppt increase in yields. 16 See the ESRB report on the macroprudential policy issues arising from low interest rates and structural changes in the EU financial system (link). 17 See, for example, Rising interest rates may cause losses for investors who emphasise safety (link). This is closely related to the question of who is bearing interest rate risk, a question which falls outside the scope of this note, but which becomes of the utmost relevance in view of the current macroeconomic environment. Page 8

9 discounting technical provisions. However, an abrupt increase in yields, as well as changes in some national tax legislations, may lead to an increase in lapses. 4 LOW PROFITABILITY OF FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS While a trend of improving profitability could recently be observed, and is expected to continue, low profitability of banks and insurers in a low-yield environment nevertheless remains a challenge for the EU financial system. Lingering risks about elevated asset price levels and a sudden reversal of yields, with potentially heightened volatility and losses in investment positions of financial institutions, contribute to this issue. Starting with the EU banks, their capital position remains at a high level. The CET1 ratio increased by 70 basis points (bps) to 14.1% in Q compared with Q1 2016, but decreased by 10bps compared with year-end Profitability shows a slight improvement, but the EU average remains below long term sustainable levels. The average return on equity (RoE) in Q increased to 6.8%, from 3.3% in Q On a year onyear comparison, the average RoE also rose 1.2 percentage points (p.p.) from 5.6% in Q1 2016, mainly thanks to the significant increase in the net trading income. 18 The dispersion of average RoE among Member States has narrowed, ranging from about 3% to 16%. Likewise, the average return on assets (RoA) increased from 0.21% in Q to 0.45% in Q Higher returns in Q also contributed to a cautiously improved cost-to-income ratio of 63.9% (65.3% in Q4 2016). RoE remains below various estimates of the cost of equity (CoE). Only ca. 50% of respondents to the June 2017 EBA RAQ agree that their current earnings cover their CoE. Higher returns in Q and an increased net operating income are moreover largely offset by continuously increasing costs. Figure 4: Bank RoE versus RoA (weighted average) Figure 5: Bank cost-to-income ratio numerator and denominator trends, Q Source : EBA Source : EBA Net interest income has remained under pressure and further decreased to 56.1% of total operating income in Q (57.8% at year-end 2016), while net interest margins (net interest income to interest-bearing assets) continue on a decreasing trend. There are some doubts about the sustainability of strongly increasing trading income reported in Q as the main driver of improving profitability % of total operating income in Q1 2017, from 6.1% in Q Page 9

10 Challenges to reach adequate levels of profitability are aggravated by the need to adapt business models, including the need for substantive investments into technological infrastructures in a rapidly evolving operating environment. In addition, litigation costs are not abating, and continue to provide a further drag on profitability. The operating environment of EU banks, with persisting overcapacities in some Member States, poses further challenges to attaining adequate profitability, while sector consolidation has to date been very limited. It is also important for supervisors and policy makers to identify and address potential structural impediments for bank sector consolidation. Responses to the June 2017 EBA RAQ nevertheless confirm a cautiously improving outlook for bank profitability. About 80% of responding banks expect ( agree and somewhat agree ) that their profitability will increase in the next 6-12 months. Similarly, more than 80% of the market analysts assume that overall profitability will improve. This compares with expectations of improving profitability of only ca. 30% in December Banks consider that net fees and commission income are the main driver for a more positive trend, followed by further cost reductions. Figure 6: EU bank expectations of profitability in the next 6-12 months Source: EBA Risk Assessment Questionnaire. While NPL ratios continue to improve, banks still struggle with high volumes of legacy assets, adding to challenges to generate acceptable levels of income from their traditional lending activities. More than one third of Member States still have NPL ratios above 10%. The NPL ratio decreased by 30 bps to 4.8% in Q1 2017, and by 80 bps compared with Q The dispersion of NPL among countries nevertheless remains wide, and improvements are particularly slow in the countries with the highest NPL levels. The coverage ratio for NPLs further improved as well, increasing by 50 bps to 45.2% in Q Responses to the June 2017 EBA RAQ suggest that banks and market analysts assume there will be growth in those portfolios where they expect asset quality to improve, such as in portfolios of SME, residential mortgages, consumer credit and corporate lending. The need for a comprehensive European response to address identified NPL challenges, along the lines identified in the conclusions of the July meeting of the European Council, has not abated, and NPL resolution continues to be a priority for EU banks. Adequate performance is an important factor for EU banks to attract market funding at moderate prices. As many banks still need to attain substantial volumes of instruments eligible for loss-absorbing capacity to meet Page 10

11 incoming regulatory requirements (MREL 19 ), the ability to issue such instruments and their pricing is becoming increasingly relevant. The importance of sufficient loss-absorbing capacity available at banks is demonstrated by recent cases of bank resolution actions taken on European and national levels. Banks should accelerate the build-up of loss-absorbing capacity, and competent authorities should provide further clarification on detailed MREL requirements and on eligibility of financial instruments for loss-absorbing capacity. The EBA and ESMA are currently conducting joint work intended to identify potential implications of retail holdings of loss-absorbing instruments for resolution planning and consumer protection. Here, the consistent and effective application of resolution tools under the BRRD has been identified as a relevant topic for retail holders of bail-in-able debt instruments. As both life and non-life insurers are largely exposed to interest-rate-sensitive assets, low yields affected the profitability of life insurers, especially in some countries where there is a significant stock of contracts with high guarantees. As the low-interest-rate environment is still ongoing, revenues could gradually dampen further in the future. The RoE for the median company is 9.1% in 2016, against 9.7% in 2015 and 11% in 2014 (Figure 7.1). The RoA for the median company continues to be stable (Figure 7.2). It was about 1% in 2016, but insurers whose business models depend heavily on interest-rate-sensitive product lines, such as traditional long-term savings products with fixed guarantees, already see declining RoA (Figure 7.2). Figure 7.1: Insurers return on equity (in %) Figure 7.2: Insurers return on assets (in %) Source: S&P Capital IQ, N=114; EIOPA elaboration. Note: the chart shows the 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th and 90th percentile distribution of the values for a sample of 114 European listed (re)insurers and brokers. Source: S&P Capital IQ, N=114; EIOPA elaboration Note: the chart shows the 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th and 90th percentile distribution of the values for a sample of 114 European listed (re)insurers and brokers. In addition to the low-yield environment, low economic growth, the low quality of assets in some countries and growing competition from FinTech corporations, amplified by high uncertainty and growing geopolitical risks, there is some potential that the profitability of some insurers within the EU may be affected negatively. EIOPA s current data and projections indicate a relatively stable picture of the European insurance market in terms of RoA, with a median value of around 1%. In 2014 and 2015, profitability exhibited a positive trend, but the median RoA started to decrease slightly in 2016, with EIOPA projections indicating the potential for further deterioration to a median value of 0.65% in Minimum requirements of own funds and eligible liabilities under the Bank Resolution and Recovery Directive (BRRD). 20 For further details, see the latest EIOPA FSR (link). Page 11

12 In an ongoing low-yield environment, the low profitability of insurers focused on asset-liability matching may trigger the reallocation of investments. Especially in the case of life insurers, the low yield affects both assets and liabilities, which would eventually lead to a deteriorating solvency position. Returns of EU fund shares remained moderate in the first half of 2017, having rebounded from even lower levels experienced since late Sectoral means of monthly returns averaged over one year ranged in 2017 from 0.2% to 1.4% across the different asset class segments. Such heterogeneity reflected the relative performance of the underlying asset markets: in the UCITS segment, equity funds and ETFs outperformed bond, mixed, alternative, real estate and commodity funds. Money market funds moved closer towards positive returns, which they entered temporarily in March Hedge funds performed marginally better than in the last two years. 21 Given the business model of the fund industry, which essentially transfers the performance of managed assets to fund shares owners, the industry s profitability is not necessarily affected negatively by moderate performance levels. With fund fees remaining roughly stable in the short run, and the industry experiencing continued growth in AuM over the last two years, except for the hedge fund segment, stable fee income would not provide evidence of profitability issues. Still, moderate yields, if continued, could generate incentives for investors to reconsider investments in the fund industry, potentially affecting net flows of funds to the industry. Such vulnerability could be further intensified by the proportionally stronger impact of static fee tariffs on the short-term returns, net of all fees paid by clients, which fund shares provide in a low-yield environment. Considering, however, the sound growth of the industry, imminent risks stemming from profitability issues appear to be rather limited. Investor protection concerns, however, persist, as product features in general, and fee tariffs in particular, do not appear to be well understood by retail clients. Regulatory reporting requirements expected to enter into force within the next two years, i.e. PRIIPs and MiFID II reporting, as well as already effective UCITS requirements were designed to facilitate increased transparency of investment products costs and would therefore contribute to the mitigation of related risks to investors. The monitoring efforts of regulatory and supervisory authorities with respect to the soundness of the fund industry and the impact of fees on investor returns are appropriate alternative tools to mitigate risks around potential profitability issues RAPID DEVELOPMENTS IN FINTECH The rapid growth of FinTech is fostering the use of technical solutions at financial institutions to support provision of services to customers and to ensure compliance with regulatory obligations. Significant investments in new technologies and a large number of new market entrants, including incumbent financial service firms, specialised start-ups and global technology companies, imply additional changes in the financial sector. Increased competition may drive changes in the business models of financial institutions, as they adapt product offerings and their interaction with customers. Thus, FinTech has the potential to transform further the provision of financial products and services in the coming years. The EU banking sector, for example, is experiencing the entry of new competitors in payment 21 More detailed data are provided in ESMA s report on Trends, Risks and Vulnerabilities, no , forthcoming in September The impact of costs on mutual fund returns available to investors is discussed in ESMA s report on Trends, Risks and Vulnerabilities, no , forthcoming in September Page 12

13 services. 23 Indeed, in their responses to the EBA June 2017 RAQ, market analysts expect technological advances to be the most important trend affecting the banking sector in the next 6-12 months, with a higher expected significance than increasing interest rates and mergers and acquisitions. In terms of FinTech s potential benefits, its proliferation creates opportunities for increased cost efficiency. New services, for example automated advice, may positively affect the final investor s action space, e.g. through providing financial advice at lower cost, as long as such services are aimed at improving consumer financial experience and the risks they may give rise to are adequately addressed. Similarly, the use of big data analytics and processes allows the development of custom-tailored products and/or more granular evaluation of risks. In this context, regulatory and supervisory authorities have a role to play, by encouraging financial innovations while, at the same time, ensuring a well-functioning consumer protection framework and financial stability. The ESAs have identified certain risks to consumers and financial institutions emerging with the proliferation of technological advances such as the use of analytical tools (e.g. robo-advice). In addition, EU supervisory authorities monitor and discuss vulnerabilities arising from outsourcing to external service providers for technological solutions such as to cloud service providers, distributed ledger technologies and the development of tailored products and new risk management tools used in the insurance sector. Turning to the outsourcing to cloud services, the EBA is consulting on recommendations 24 intended to clarify the EU-wide supervisory expectations if institutions intend to adopt cloud computing, to enable them to leverage the benefits of using cloud services, while ensuring that any related risks are adequately identified and managed. Under its direct supervision mandate for credit-rating agencies and trade repositories, ESMA is also looking to identify the impact and the risks of the use of cloud-computing models from a supervisory perspective and determine its supervisory response regarding this topic. 25 As regards robo-advice, the ESAs have published a report that outlines main risks and opportunities of this innovation across the insurance, banking and investment sectors. 26 The main consumer protection risks identified in the report were related to the following aspects. (i) Consumers may have limited access to information and/or limited ability to process that information. Thus, they may lack the ability to raise clarification requests, may make unsuitable decisions, may receive unsuitable advice or may not be fully aware of the extent to which the tool produces recommendations tailored to them. Furthermore, (ii) advice tools may be exposed to possible malfunctioning due to errors, hacking or manipulation of the algorithm and/or a lack of sensitivity of algorithms with respect to specific needs of individual investors. Such flaws could compromise the quality of the advice and/or render the advice unsuitable. Redress claims and subsequent negative effects on the stability of financial entities could result. In addition, risks to financial entities could include litigation exposure, subsequent reputational risk and legal disputes over unclear liability allocation within value chains including several providers. The ESAs are also investigating the use of big data analytics by financial institutions. A Joint Committee Discussion Paper published in December 2016 by the three ESAs outlined a number of potential benefits and risks of this innovation. The main risks to consumers identified in this area include (i) risks related to reduced 23 This refers to the new categories of firms introduced under PSD II, i.e. payment initiation services providers and account information service providers. 24 See Draft recommendation on outsourcing to cloud service providers. EBA/CP/2017/06, May See ESMA (2017): ESMA s supervision of credit rating agencies, trade repositories and monitoring of third country central counterparties. 26 See the Report on automation in financial advice, published by the Joint Committee of the ESAs. JC , December Page 13

14 comparability of financial services as a consequence of the increasing personalisation that big data makes feasible; and (ii) risks related to discrimination, such as possible limitations of some consumers access to service and/or information or the application of different conditions and/or prices based on the analysis of behavioural data. In parallel, the EBA has also undertaken an extensive analysis of innovative uses of consumer data by financial institutions, highlighting the potential benefits and risks. An EBA report 27 concludes that, while further industry-specific regulations are currently not be required, given that an extensive set of legal requirements is already in place, competent authorities should continue to monitor closely the development of innovations. The report also encourages cooperation between supervisory authorities across relevant policy areas, as well as initiatives to raise consumers awareness on how their data are being used. An EBA Discussion Paper 28 identifies proposals for future FinTech-related work, e.g. in the area of authorisation and sandboxing regimes, with respect to the impact on prudential and operational risks for credit institutions, electronic money institutions and payment institutions, and in the area of consumer protection and retail conduct of business issues. The ESMA February 2017 Report on Distributed Ledger Technology in securities markets 29 identified some possible financial stability risks due to the potential of automatic triggers employed in smart contracts to contribute to market volatility as well as unintended adverse effects on market liquidity and interconnectedness. In addition, data privacy issues were observed around the possible identification of parties through their trading behaviour. InsurTech 30 is of strategic importance for the insurance sector and therefore a topic that EIOPA is following closely. An example is enhanced fraud analytics, which improve the detection and investigation of fraudulent practices, thereby reducing costs. 31 There are numerous opportunities arising from InsurTech, both for the industry and for consumers, but it has also become increasingly clear that digitalisation is raising a wider range of issues and aspects that deserve the attention of supervisory authorities in close cooperation with stakeholders. Technological innovations are also having impacts on all stages of the insurance value chain, to a great extent as a result of the digitalisation of data and processes. There are also a number of issues arising, some of an ethical nature, that supervisory authorities need to carefully examine in order to ensure the fair treatment of consumers, taking into account the latest legislative developments too, such as the new European General Data Protection Regulation. 6 POLICY ACTIONS In light of the risks and uncertainties discussed in this report, especially those around the process of the UK s withdrawal from the EU, supervisory cooperation across all sectors remains key to ensure an orderly functioning of financial markets. 27 EBA report on innovative uses of consumer data by financial institutions (link) (June 2016). 28 EBA Discussion Paper on its approach to FinTech (link) (August 2017). 29 ESMA report on the The Distributed Ledger Technology Applied to Securities Markets (link) (February 2017). 30 FinTech for the insurance business is called InsurTech. 31 EIOPA s response to the Commission s public consultation on FinTech (link) (June 2017). Page 14

Risk Assessment Questionnaire (RAQ) Summary of Results. Risk Assessment Questionnaire Summary of Results July 2018

Risk Assessment Questionnaire (RAQ) Summary of Results. Risk Assessment Questionnaire Summary of Results July 2018 Risk Assessment Questionnaire Summary of Results July 2018 1 Contents Introduction 3 Summary of the main results 4 Banks questionnaire 8 1. Business model / strategy / profitability 8 2. Funding / liquidity

More information

RISK DASHBOARD DATA AS OF Q2 2018

RISK DASHBOARD DATA AS OF Q2 2018 RISK DASHBOARD DATA AS OF Q2 2018 2 Contents 1 Summary 3 2 Overview of the main risks and vulnerabilities in the EU banking sector 4 3 Heatmap 5 4 Risk Indicators (RIs) 4.1 Solvency Tier 1 capital ratio

More information

RISK DASHBOARD DATA AS OF Q3 2017

RISK DASHBOARD DATA AS OF Q3 2017 RI DASHBOARD DA AS OF Q3 2017 2 Contents 1 Summary 3 2 Overview of the main risks and vulnerabilities in the banking sector 4 3 Heatmap 5 4 Risk Indicators (RIs) 4.1 Solvency Tier 1 capital ratio 6 Total

More information

Risk Assessment Questionnaire (RAQ) Summary of Results. Risk Assessment Questionnaire Summary of Results December 2017

Risk Assessment Questionnaire (RAQ) Summary of Results. Risk Assessment Questionnaire Summary of Results December 2017 Risk Assessment Questionnaire Summary of Results December 2017 1 Contents Introduction 3 Summary of the main results 4 Banks questionnaire 8 1. Business model / strategy / profitability 8 2. Funding /

More information

RISK DASHBOARD DATA AS OF Q4 2017

RISK DASHBOARD DATA AS OF Q4 2017 RISK DASHBOARD DATA AS OF Q4 2017 2 Contents 1 Summary 3 2 Overview of the main risks and vulnerabilities in the banking sector 4 3 Heatmap 5 4 Risk Indicators (RIs) 4.1 Solvency Tier 1 capital ratio 6

More information

RISK DASHBOARD DATA AS OF Q1 2018

RISK DASHBOARD DATA AS OF Q1 2018 RISK DASHBOARD DATA AS OF Q1 2018 2 Contents 1 Summary 3 2 Overview of the main risks and vulnerabilities in the EU banking sector 4 3 Heatmap 5 4 Risk Indicators (RIs) 4.1 Solvency Tier 1 capital ratio

More information

Financial Policy Committee Statement from its policy meeting, 12 March 2018

Financial Policy Committee Statement from its policy meeting, 12 March 2018 Press Office Threadneedle Street London EC2R 8AH T 020 7601 4411 F 020 7601 5460 press@bankofengland.co.uk www.bankofengland.co.uk 16 March 2018 Financial Policy Committee Statement from its policy meeting,

More information

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND POLICY ACTIONS

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND POLICY ACTIONS 11 September 218 JC 218 34 JOINT COMMITTEE REPORT ON RISKS AND VULNERABILITIES IN THE EU FINANCIAL SYSTEM SEPTEMBER 218 Executive summary and Policy actions... 1 1 Introduction... 3 2 Risk related to valuations,

More information

5. Risk assessment Qualitative risk assessment

5. Risk assessment Qualitative risk assessment 5. Risk assessment The chapter is devoted to analyse the risks affecting the insurance and pension fund industry and their impact on them both from a qualitative and a quantitative perspective. In detail,

More information

2018 EU-WIDE TRANSPARENCY EXERCISE AND RISK ASSESSMENT REPORT

2018 EU-WIDE TRANSPARENCY EXERCISE AND RISK ASSESSMENT REPORT 2018 EU-WIDE TRANSPARENCY EXERCISE AND RISK ASSESSMENT REPORT Mario Quagliariello Director of Economic Analysis and Statistics Background Briefing with analysts and journalists 14 December 2018 Outline

More information

1.1. Low yield environment

1.1. Low yield environment 1. Key developments Overall, the macroeconomic outlook has deteriorated since June 215. Although many European countries continue to recover, economic growth still remains fragile reflecting high public

More information

RISK DASHBOARD DATA AS OF Q4 2015

RISK DASHBOARD DATA AS OF Q4 2015 RISK DASHBOARD DATA AS OF Q4 20 2 Contents 1 Summary 3 2 Overview of the main risks and vulnerabilities in the banking sector 4 3 Heatmap 5 4 Risk Indicators (RIs) 4.1 Solvency Tier 1 capital ratio 6 Total

More information

Scenario for the European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority s EU-wide insurance stress test in 2016

Scenario for the European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority s EU-wide insurance stress test in 2016 17 March 2016 ECB-PUBLIC Scenario for the European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority s EU-wide insurance stress test in 2016 Introduction In accordance with its mandate, the European Insurance

More information

5. Risk assessment Qualitative risk assessment

5. Risk assessment Qualitative risk assessment 5. Risk assessment 5.1. Qualitative risk assessment EIOPA conducts twice a year a bottom-up survey among national supervisors to determine the key risks and challenges classified as the most imminent in

More information

1.1. Low yield environment

1.1. Low yield environment 1. Key developments The overall macroeconomic environment remains very challenging for the European insurance and pension sector. The yields have been further compressed and are substantially below the

More information

RISK DASHBOARD DATA AS OF Q2 2017

RISK DASHBOARD DATA AS OF Q2 2017 RI DASHBOARD DA AS OF Q2 2017 2 Contents 1 Summary 3 2 Overview of the main risks and vulnerabilities in the banking sector 4 3 Heatmap 5 4 Risk Indicators (RIs) 4.1 Solvency Tier 1 capital ratio 6 Total

More information

Portuguese Banking System: latest developments. 1 st quarter 2018

Portuguese Banking System: latest developments. 1 st quarter 2018 Portuguese Banking System: latest developments 1 st quarter 218 Lisbon, 218 www.bportugal.pt Prepared with data available up to 27 th June of 218. Macroeconomic indicators and banking system data are quarterly

More information

REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL. Market developments potentially requiring the use of Article 459 CRR

REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL. Market developments potentially requiring the use of Article 459 CRR EUROPEAN COMMISSION Brussels, 8.3.2017 COM(2017) 121 final REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL Market developments potentially requiring the use of Article 459 CRR EN

More information

International Monetary and Financial Committee

International Monetary and Financial Committee International Monetary and Financial Committee Thirty-Eighth Meeting October 12 13, 2018 Statement No. 38-31 Statement by Mr. Draghi European Central Bank Statement by Mario Draghi, President of the ECB,

More information

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND POLICY ACTIONS

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND POLICY ACTIONS JC 218 7 JOINT COMMITTEE REPORT ON RISKS AND VULNERABILITIES IN THE EU FINANCIAL SYSTEM APRIL 218 Executive summary and Policy actions... 1 1 Introduction... 3 2 Risk related to valuations and repricing

More information

Summary of the June 2010 Financial Stability RevieW

Summary of the June 2010 Financial Stability RevieW Summary of the June 21 Financial Stability RevieW The primary objective of the s Financial Stability Review (FSR) is to identify the main sources of risk to the stability of the euro area financial system

More information

Quarterly Systemic Risk Survey. December Year II, No. 5

Quarterly Systemic Risk Survey. December Year II, No. 5 Quarterly Systemic Risk Survey December 18 Year II, No. 5 Quarterly Systemic Risk Survey December 18 Year II, No. 5 N O T E All rights reserved. Reproduction for educational and non-commercial purposes

More information

Systemic risk due to retailisation?

Systemic risk due to retailisation? Systemic risk due to retailisation? Oliver Burkart and Antoine Bouveret *+ Over the last few years retailisation, i.e. the marketing of complex products to retail investors by financial institutions, has

More information

OVERVIEW. The EU recovery is firming. Table 1: Overview - the winter 2014 forecast Real GDP. Unemployment rate. Inflation. Winter 2014 Winter 2014

OVERVIEW. The EU recovery is firming. Table 1: Overview - the winter 2014 forecast Real GDP. Unemployment rate. Inflation. Winter 2014 Winter 2014 OVERVIEW The EU recovery is firming Europe's economic recovery, which began in the second quarter of 2013, is expected to continue spreading across countries and gaining strength while at the same time

More information

2. The European insurance sector

2. The European insurance sector 2. The European insurance sector 2.1. Market Share and Growth The insurance sector substantially differs among European countries (Figure 2.1). The penetration rate indicates the level of development of

More information

Portuguese Banking System: latest developments. 2 nd quarter 2018

Portuguese Banking System: latest developments. 2 nd quarter 2018 Portuguese Banking System: latest developments 2 nd quarter 218 Lisbon, 218 www.bportugal.pt Prepared with data available up to 26 th September of 218. Macroeconomic indicators and banking system data

More information

Risk Assessment Questionnaire (RAQ) Summary of the results. Risk Assessment Questionnaire Summary of the Results December 2018

Risk Assessment Questionnaire (RAQ) Summary of the results. Risk Assessment Questionnaire Summary of the Results December 2018 Risk Assessment Questionnaire Summary of the Results December 2018 1 Contents Introduction 3 Summary of the main results 4 Banks questionnaire 8 1. Business model / strategy / profitability 8 2. Funding

More information

Portuguese Banking System: latest developments. 4 th quarter 2017

Portuguese Banking System: latest developments. 4 th quarter 2017 Portuguese Banking System: latest developments 4 th quarter 217 Lisbon, 218 www.bportugal.pt Prepared with data available up to 2 th March of 218. Macroeconomic indicators and banking system data are

More information

Corporate and Household Sectors in Austria: Subdued Growth of Indebtedness

Corporate and Household Sectors in Austria: Subdued Growth of Indebtedness Corporate and Household Sectors in Austria: Subdued Growth of Indebtedness Stabilization of Corporate Sector Risk Indicators The Austrian Economy Slows Down Against the background of the renewed recession

More information

EIOPA/ESRB adverse financial market scenarios for insurance stress test

EIOPA/ESRB adverse financial market scenarios for insurance stress test EIOPA/ESRB adverse financial market scenarios for insurance stress test Introduction According to its mandate, the EIOPA shall, in cooperation with the ESRB, initiate and coordinate Union-wide stress tests

More information

Portuguese Banking System: latest developments. 4 th quarter 2016

Portuguese Banking System: latest developments. 4 th quarter 2016 Portuguese Banking System: latest developments 4 th quarter 216 Lisbon, 217 www.bportugal.pt Prepared with data available up to 3 th March of 217. Portuguese Banking System: latest developments Banco de

More information

Macro vulnerabilities, regulatory reforms and financial stability issues IIF Spring Meeting

Macro vulnerabilities, regulatory reforms and financial stability issues IIF Spring Meeting 25.05.2016 Macro vulnerabilities, regulatory reforms and financial stability issues IIF Spring Meeting Luis M. Linde Governor I would like to thank Tim Adams, President and Chief Executive Officer of

More information

Portuguese Banking System: latest developments. 3 rd quarter 2017

Portuguese Banking System: latest developments. 3 rd quarter 2017 Portuguese Banking System: latest developments 3 rd quarter 217 Lisbon, 218 www.bportugal.pt Prepared with data available up to 18 th December of 217 for macroeconomic and financial market indicators,

More information

ECONOMIC AND MONETARY DEVELOPMENTS

ECONOMIC AND MONETARY DEVELOPMENTS Box 2 RECENT WIDENING IN EURO AREA SOVEREIGN BOND YIELD SPREADS This box looks at recent in euro area countries sovereign bond yield spreads and the potential roles played by credit and liquidity risk.

More information

International Monetary and Financial Committee

International Monetary and Financial Committee International Monetary and Financial Committee Thirty-Eighth Meeting October 12 13, 2018 Statement No. 38-27 Statement by Mr. Yi People s Republic of China PBOC Governor YI Gang s Statement at the Ministerial

More information

Opinion on the solvency position of insurance and reinsurance undertakings in light of the withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union

Opinion on the solvency position of insurance and reinsurance undertakings in light of the withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union EIOPA-BoS-18/201 18 May 2018 Opinion on the solvency position of insurance and reinsurance undertakings in light of the withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union 1. Legal basis 1.1. The

More information

SYSTEMIC RISK BUFFER. Background analysis for the implementation of the Systemic Risk Buffer as a macro-prudential measure in Estonia

SYSTEMIC RISK BUFFER. Background analysis for the implementation of the Systemic Risk Buffer as a macro-prudential measure in Estonia SYSTEMIC RISK BUFFER Background analysis for the implementation of the as a macro-prudential measure in Estonia May 214 SUMMARY Starting from 1 January 214 the revised prudential requirements for credit

More information

LESS DYNAMIC GROWTH AMID HIGH UNCERTAINTY

LESS DYNAMIC GROWTH AMID HIGH UNCERTAINTY OVERVIEW: The European economy has moved into lower gear amid still robust domestic fundamentals. GDP growth is set to continue at a slower pace. LESS DYNAMIC GROWTH AMID HIGH UNCERTAINTY Interrelated

More information

Financial Policy Summary and Record of the Financial Policy Committee Meeting on 26 February 2019

Financial Policy Summary and Record of the Financial Policy Committee Meeting on 26 February 2019 Financial Policy Summary and Record of the Financial Policy Committee Meeting on 26 February 2019 Publication date: 5 March 2019 This is the record of the Financial Policy Committee meeting held on 26

More information

Financial System Stabilized, but Exit, Reform, and Fiscal Challenges Lie Ahead

Financial System Stabilized, but Exit, Reform, and Fiscal Challenges Lie Ahead January 21 Financial System Stabilized, but Exit, Reform, and Fiscal Challenges Lie Ahead Systemic risks have continued to subside as economic fundamentals have improved and substantial public support

More information

KEYNOTE SPEECH: What will the future hold? The European insurance industry in times of major disruption

KEYNOTE SPEECH: What will the future hold? The European insurance industry in times of major disruption Dr. Manuela Zweimüller Head of Policy Department European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority (EIOPA) KEYNOTE SPEECH: What will the future hold? The European insurance industry in times of major

More information

Euro area financial regulation: where do we stand?

Euro area financial regulation: where do we stand? Euro area financial regulation: where do we stand? Benoît Cœuré Member of the Executive Board European Central Bank Paris, 18 January 2013 1 Euro area banking sector - What has been done? 2 Large amounts

More information

5. Risk assessment Qualitative risk assessment

5. Risk assessment Qualitative risk assessment 5. Risk assessment 5.1. Qualitative risk assessment A qualitative risk assessment is an important part of the overall financial stability framework. EIOPA conducts regular bottom-up surveys among national

More information

BANK OF FINLAND ARTICLES ON THE ECONOMY

BANK OF FINLAND ARTICLES ON THE ECONOMY BANK OF FINLAND ARTICLES ON THE ECONOMY Table of Contents Global economy to grow steadily 3 FORECAST FOR THE GLOBAL ECONOMY Global economy to grow steadily TODAY 1:00 PM BANK OF FINLAND BULLETIN 1/2017

More information

Monetary Policy Council. Monetary Policy Guidelines for 2019

Monetary Policy Council. Monetary Policy Guidelines for 2019 Monetary Policy Council Monetary Policy Guidelines for 2019 Monetary Policy Guidelines for 2019 Warsaw, 2018 r. In setting the Monetary Policy Guidelines for 2019, the Monetary Policy Council fulfils

More information

Indonesia: Changing patterns of financial intermediation and their implications for central bank policy

Indonesia: Changing patterns of financial intermediation and their implications for central bank policy Indonesia: Changing patterns of financial intermediation and their implications for central bank policy Perry Warjiyo 1 Abstract As a bank-based economy, global factors affect financial intermediation

More information

JOINT COMMITTEE REPORT ON RISKS AND VULNERABILITIES IN THE EU FINANCIAL SYSTEM AUGUST 2014

JOINT COMMITTEE REPORT ON RISKS AND VULNERABILITIES IN THE EU FINANCIAL SYSTEM AUGUST 2014 JC 2014 063 22 September 2014 JOINT COMMITTEE REPORT ON RISKS AND VULNERABILITIES IN THE EU FINANCIAL SYSTEM AUGUST 2014 Executive summary... 2 Introduction... 4 Regulatory context... 4 1 Macro risks...

More information

14. What Use Can Be Made of the Specific FSIs?

14. What Use Can Be Made of the Specific FSIs? 14. What Use Can Be Made of the Specific FSIs? Introduction 14.1 The previous chapter explained the need for FSIs and how they fit into the wider concept of macroprudential analysis. This chapter considers

More information

Q7. Do you have additional comments on the draft guidelines on organisational requirements for investment firms electronic trading systems?

Q7. Do you have additional comments on the draft guidelines on organisational requirements for investment firms electronic trading systems? 21 September ESRB response to the ESMA Consultation paper on Guidelines on systems and controls in a highly automated trading environment for trading platforms, investment firms and competent authorities

More information

Assessing Capital Markets Union

Assessing Capital Markets Union 6 Assessing Capital Markets Union Quarterly Assessment by Paul Richards Summary It is too early to make an assessment of Capital Markets Union, but not too early to give a market view of the tests by which

More information

RISK ASSESSMENT OF THE EUROPEAN BANKING SYSTEM NOVEMBER 2017

RISK ASSESSMENT OF THE EUROPEAN BANKING SYSTEM NOVEMBER 2017 RISK ASSESSMENT OF THE EUROPEAN BANKING SYSTEM NOVEMBER 2017 Europe Direct is a service to help you find answers to your questions about the European Union Freephone number (*): 00 800 6 7 8 9 10 11 (*)

More information

European Financial Stability and Integration Report Nadia CALVIÑO Deputy Director General DG Internal Market and Services

European Financial Stability and Integration Report Nadia CALVIÑO Deputy Director General DG Internal Market and Services European Financial Stability and Integration Report 2011 Nadia CALVIÑO Deputy Director General DG Internal Market and Services EFSIR 2011 2011 critical year in the financial and economic crisis complex

More information

2. THE EUROPEAN INSURANCE SECTOR

2. THE EUROPEAN INSURANCE SECTOR 2. THE EUROPEAN INSURANCE SECTOR The prolonged low interest rate environment, growing trade tensions and considerable political and policy uncertainty, not least regarding the outcome of on-going negotiations

More information

Portuguese Banking System: latest developments. 2 nd quarter 2017

Portuguese Banking System: latest developments. 2 nd quarter 2017 Portuguese Banking System: latest developments nd quarter 17 Lisbon, 17 www.bportugal.pt Prepared with data available up to th September of 17. Portuguese Banking System: latest developments Banco de Portugal

More information

Outlook for Economic Activity and Prices (July 2018)

Outlook for Economic Activity and Prices (July 2018) Outlook for Economic Activity and Prices (July 2018) July 31, 2018 Bank of Japan The Bank's View 1 Summary Japan's economy is likely to continue growing at a pace above its potential in fiscal 2018, mainly

More information

Portuguese Banking System: latest developments. 1 st quarter 2017

Portuguese Banking System: latest developments. 1 st quarter 2017 Portuguese Banking System: latest developments 1 st quarter 17 Lisbon, 17 www.bportugal.pt Prepared with data available up to 7 th June of 17. Portuguese Banking System: latest developments Banco de Portugal

More information

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. Global Economic Environment

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. Global Economic Environment The global economy grew strongly in the first half of 2007, although turbulence in financial markets has clouded prospects. While the 2007 forecast has been little affected, the baseline projection for

More information

EU banks business models Adapt to thrive

EU banks business models Adapt to thrive SPEECH AT THE DEUTSCHE BUNDESBANK CONFERENCE BANK BUSINESS MODELS - STRUCTURAL CHANGES AND THEIR SYSTEMIC IMPLICATIONS BY ADAM FARKAS, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF THE EBA Speech at Deutsche Bundesbank Conference

More information

International Monetary and Financial Committee

International Monetary and Financial Committee International Monetary and Financial Committee Thirty-Third Meeting April 16, 2016 IMFC Statement by Angel Gurría Secretary-General The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) IMF

More information

REMARKS BY JAVIER GUZMÁN CALAFELL, DEPUTY GOVERNOR AT THE BANCO DE MÉXICO, ON MEXICO S MONETARY POLICY AND ECONOMIC OUTLOOK.

REMARKS BY JAVIER GUZMÁN CALAFELL, DEPUTY GOVERNOR AT THE BANCO DE MÉXICO, ON MEXICO S MONETARY POLICY AND ECONOMIC OUTLOOK. REMARKS BY JAVIER GUZMÁN CALAFELL, DEPUTY GOVERNOR AT THE BANCO DE MÉXICO, ON MEXICO S MONETARY POLICY AND ECONOMIC OUTLOOK. THE UNITED STATES-MEXICO CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, NORTHEAST CHAPTER. February 15-16,

More information

European supervision in a changing environment

European supervision in a changing environment Gabriel Bernardino Chairman European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority (EIOPA) European supervision in a changing environment Supervision and Regulation of the Financial Sector in the European

More information

RISK DASHBOARD. April

RISK DASHBOARD. April RISK DASHBOARD April 2017 1 Risks Level Trend 1. Macro risks High 2. Credit risks Medium 3. Market risks Medium 4. Liquidity and funding risks Medium 5. Profitability and solvency Medium 6. Interlinkages

More information

Global Macroeconomic Monthly Review

Global Macroeconomic Monthly Review Global Macroeconomic Monthly Review August 14 th, 2018 Arie Tal, Research Economist Capital Markets Division, Economics Department 1 Please see disclaimer on the last page of this report Key Issues Global

More information

National Bank of Romania s experience in dealing with the NPLs challenge

National Bank of Romania s experience in dealing with the NPLs challenge June 15 th, 2016 National Bank of Romania s experience in dealing with the NPLs challenge Florin Georgescu First Deputy Governor REGIONAL HIGH-LEVEL WORKSHOP ON NPLs RESOLUTION CONTENTS I. Romanian banking

More information

This section of the risk dashboard comprises a set of synthetic indicators of systemic risk and measures of interlinkages across financial markets.

This section of the risk dashboard comprises a set of synthetic indicators of systemic risk and measures of interlinkages across financial markets. Annex II to the ESRB risk dashboard Last update: December 2017 Description of the indicators The ESRB risk dashboard is structured according to a set of risk categories comprising interlinkages and composite

More information

International Monetary and Financial Committee

International Monetary and Financial Committee International Monetary and Financial Committee Thirty-Second Meeting October 9 10, 2015 Statement by José Darío Uribe, Governor, Banco de la República, Colombia On behalf of Colombia, Costa Rica, El Salvador,

More information

Financial Stability Report

Financial Stability Report Financial Stability Report June 218 Financial Stability Report June 218 Lisboa, 218 www.bportugal.pt Financial Stability Report June 218 Banco de Portugal Av. Almirante Reis, 71 115-12 Lisboa www.bportugal.pt

More information

REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL

REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL EUROPEAN COMMISSION Brussels, 19.10.2017 COM(2017) 604 final REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL under Article 29(3) of Regulation (EU) 2015/2365 of 25 November 2015 on

More information

ECB Financial Stability Review

ECB Financial Stability Review Vítor Constâncio ECB Financial Stability Review November 214 27 November 214 Press briefing presentation Rubric Recent developments Euro area systemic stress has remained at low levels despite intermittent

More information

Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID): Frequently Asked Questions

Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID): Frequently Asked Questions MEMO/10/659 Brussels, 8 December 2010 Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID): Frequently Asked Questions 1. What is MiFID? MiFID is the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive or Directive

More information

25 th ASSIOM FOREX Congress. Speech by the Governor of the Bank of Italy Ignazio Visco

25 th ASSIOM FOREX Congress. Speech by the Governor of the Bank of Italy Ignazio Visco 25 th ASSIOM FOREX Congress Speech by the Governor of the Bank of Italy Ignazio Visco Rome, 2 February 2019 Recent economic developments Since mid-2018 the global economy has been slowing. The euro area

More information

THE EURO AREA: ECONOMIC SITUATION, PROSPECTS AND CHALLENGES

THE EURO AREA: ECONOMIC SITUATION, PROSPECTS AND CHALLENGES THE EURO AREA: ECONOMIC SITUATION, PROSPECTS AND CHALLENGES Óscar Arce Director General Economics, Statistics and Research Banco de España Global Interdependence Center Central Banking Series Madrid, 218

More information

Erdem Başçi: Recent economic and financial developments in Turkey

Erdem Başçi: Recent economic and financial developments in Turkey Erdem Başçi: Recent economic and financial developments in Turkey Speech by Mr Erdem Başçi, Governor of the Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey, at the press conference for the presentation of the April

More information

The Rt Hon Philip Hammond MP Chancellor of the Exchequer HM Treasury 1 Horse Guards Road London SW1A2HQ 5 December 2018

The Rt Hon Philip Hammond MP Chancellor of the Exchequer HM Treasury 1 Horse Guards Road London SW1A2HQ 5 December 2018 Mark Carney Governor The Rt Hon Philip Hammond MP Chancellor of the Exchequer HM Treasury 1 Horse Guards Road London SW1A2HQ 5 December 2018 In my role as Chair of the Financial Policy Committee (FPC),

More information

5. Bulgarian National Bank Forecast of Key

5. Bulgarian National Bank Forecast of Key 5. Bulgarian National Bank Forecast of Key Macroeconomic Indicators for 2018 2020 This issue of Economic Review includes the of key macroeconomic indicators for the 2018 2020 period. It is based on information

More information

Annual Financial Stability Report Belgrade, 30 July 2018

Annual Financial Stability Report Belgrade, 30 July 2018 Annual Financial Stability Report 17 Belgrade, 3 July 18 External risks and measures - Diverging monetary policies of the Fed and the ECB may affect capital flows towards emerging markets; - Price volatility

More information

The new supervisory agenda

The new supervisory agenda The new supervisory agenda Keynote address by Agustín Carstens General Manager, Bank for International Settlements 13th ASBA-BCBS-FSI High-level Meeting on Global and Regional Supervisory Priorities Nassau,

More information

Recent developments in the euro money market. Money Market Contact Group Frankfurt, 18 September 2012

Recent developments in the euro money market. Money Market Contact Group Frankfurt, 18 September 2012 Recent developments in the euro money market Money Market Contact Group Frankfurt, 18 September 2012 ECB developments and announcements I 5 July 2012 The ECB reduced by 25 basis points the interest rate

More information

Liquidity is Relevant Again

Liquidity is Relevant Again Liquidity is Relevant Again April 2019 Not FDIC Insured May Lose Value No Bank Guarantee Not NCUA or NCUSIF insured. May lose value. No credit union guarantee. For institutional use only. l 2019 FMR LLC.

More information

Latin America Outlook. 2nd QUARTER 2017

Latin America Outlook. 2nd QUARTER 2017 Latin America Outlook 2nd QUARTER Latin America Outlook 2Q17 Main messages 1. Global growth keeps increasing, and uncertainty about US policies starts to fade. Nevertheless, global risks remain. 2. The

More information

Gertrude Tumpel-Gugerell: The euro area s economic outlook

Gertrude Tumpel-Gugerell: The euro area s economic outlook Gertrude Tumpel-Gugerell: The euro area s economic outlook Intervention by Ms Gertrude Tumpel-Gugerell, Member of the Executive Board of the European Central Bank, during a panel discussion on Europe s

More information

Shadow Banking. June Avocats à la Cour

Shadow Banking. June Avocats à la Cour Shadow Banking June 2013 Avocats à la Cour Index 1. Introduction 3 2. Definition of Shadow Banking 3 2.1 Entities 3 2.2 Activities 4 3. Benefits and risks 4 3.1 Benefits 4 3.2 Risks 4 4. Challenge for

More information

Adverse macro-financial scenario for the 2018 EU-wide banking sector stress test

Adverse macro-financial scenario for the 2018 EU-wide banking sector stress test 16 January 2018 ECB-PUBLIC Adverse macro-financial scenario for the 2018 EU-wide banking sector stress test This document sets out the adverse macro-financial scenario that banks are required to use in

More information

Monetary and Exchange Rate Policy Responses to the Global Financial Crisis: The Case of Colombia

Monetary and Exchange Rate Policy Responses to the Global Financial Crisis: The Case of Colombia Monetary and Exchange Rate Policy Responses to the Global Financial Crisis: The Case of Colombia Hernando Vargas Banco de la República Colombia March, 2009 Contents I. The state of the Colombian economy

More information

Report on financial stability

Report on financial stability Report on financial stability Márton Nagy MNB Club 26 April 212 Key risks Deteriorating lending capacity stemming particularly from liquidity side raises the risk of a credit crunch, mainly in the corporate

More information

RISK DASHBOARD DATA AS OF Q1 2016

RISK DASHBOARD DATA AS OF Q1 2016 RISK DASHBOARD DA AS OF Q1 2016 2 Contents 1 Summary 3 2 Overview of the main risks and vulnerabilities in the banking sector 4 3 Heatmap 5 4 Risk Indicators (RIs) 4.1 Solvency Tier 1 capital ratio 6 Total

More information

UPDATE ON GLOBAL PROSPECTS AND POLICY CHALLENGES

UPDATE ON GLOBAL PROSPECTS AND POLICY CHALLENGES G R O U P O F T W E N T Y UPDATE ON GLOBAL PROSPECTS AND POLICY CHALLENGES G-20 Leaders Summit September 5 6, 2013 St. Petersburg Prepared by Staff of the I N T E R N A T I O N A L M O N E T A R Y F U

More information

RISK DASHBOARD. January

RISK DASHBOARD. January EIOPA-BoS/19-73 31 January 219 RISK DASHBOARD January 219 1 Risks Level Trend 1. Macro risks Medium 2. Credit risks Medium 3. Market risks Medium 4. Liquidity and funding risks Medium 5. Profitability

More information

M&G Strategic Corporate Bond Fund Interim Short Report February 2018 For the six months ended 28 February 2018

M&G Strategic Corporate Bond Fund Interim Short Report February 2018 For the six months ended 28 February 2018 M&G Strategic Corporate Bond Fund Interim Short Report February 2018 For the six months ended 28 February 2018 Fund information The Authorised Corporate Director (ACD) of M&G Strategic Corporate Bond Fund

More information

Trends in financial intermediation: Implications for central bank policy

Trends in financial intermediation: Implications for central bank policy Trends in financial intermediation: Implications for central bank policy Monetary Authority of Singapore Abstract Accommodative global liquidity conditions post-crisis have translated into low domestic

More information

Developments in inflation and its determinants

Developments in inflation and its determinants INFLATION REPORT February 2018 Summary Developments in inflation and its determinants The annual CPI inflation rate strengthened its upward trend in the course of 2017 Q4, standing at 3.32 percent in December,

More information

Minutes of the Monetary Policy Council decision-making meeting held on 6 July 2016

Minutes of the Monetary Policy Council decision-making meeting held on 6 July 2016 Minutes of the Monetary Policy Council decision-making meeting held on 6 July 2016 At the meeting, members of the Monetary Policy Council discussed monetary policy against the background of macroeconomic

More information

International Monetary and Financial Committee

International Monetary and Financial Committee International Monetary and Financial Committee Thirty-Fourth Meeting October 8, 2016 IMFC Statement by Zhou Xiaochuan Governor, People's Bank of China People s Republic of China On behalf of the People's

More information

Eurozone Economic Watch. July 2018

Eurozone Economic Watch. July 2018 Eurozone Economic Watch July 2018 Eurozone: A shift to more moderate growth with increased downward risks BBVA Research - Eurozone Economic Watch July 2018 / 2 Hard data improved in May but failed to recover

More information

2. The European insurance sector

2. The European insurance sector 2. The European insurance sector The sector has continued to adjust to the new Solvency II (SII) regime, which entered into force in January 2016. The Solvency II Directive introduced significant changes

More information

EIOPA-BoS-17/ November Investment behaviour report

EIOPA-BoS-17/ November Investment behaviour report EIOPA-BoS-17/230 16 November 2017 Investment behaviour report 1/29 Table of contents 1 Executive summary page 3-4 2 Introduction page 5 3 Data and Sample pages 6-7 4 Developments in investment allocation

More information

EBA REPORT ON ASSET ENCUMBRANCE JULY 2017

EBA REPORT ON ASSET ENCUMBRANCE JULY 2017 EBA REPORT ON ASSET ENCUMBRANCE JULY 2017 1 Contents List of figures 3 Executive summary 4 Analysis of the asset encumbrance of European banks 6 Sample 6 Scope of the report 6 Total encumbrance 7 Encumbrance

More information

Risk. Manager of the System Open Market Account and Executive Vice President, Markets Group, Federal Reserve Bank of New York

Risk. Manager of the System Open Market Account and Executive Vice President, Markets Group, Federal Reserve Bank of New York The Changing Nature of Risk Operational in Foreign Exchange Dino Kos Manager of the System Open Market Account and Executive Vice President, Markets Group, Federal Reserve Bank of New York Member, The

More information

Credit Suisse Swiss Pension Fund Index Q1 2018

Credit Suisse Swiss Pension Fund Index Q1 2018 Credit Suisse Swiss Pension Fund Index Q1 2018 Q1 2018: 1.33% Performance correction in Q1 2018 Negative contribution from all asset classes except real estate and mortgages Equity component shows a fall

More information

DGG 1C EUROPEAN UNION. Brussels, 5 November 2015 (OR. en) 2014/0017 (COD) PE-CONS 41/15 EF 131 ECOFIN 564 CODEC 970

DGG 1C EUROPEAN UNION. Brussels, 5 November 2015 (OR. en) 2014/0017 (COD) PE-CONS 41/15 EF 131 ECOFIN 564 CODEC 970 EUROPEAN UNION THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMT THE COUNCIL Brussels, 5 November 2015 (OR. en) 2014/0017 (COD) PE-CONS 41/15 EF 131 ECOFIN 564 CODEC 970 LEGISLATIVE ACTS AND OTHER INSTRUMTS Subject: REGULATION OF

More information